Luís Fernando Moura is a curator, film researcher, writer, producer, and consultant born and based in Recife, Brazil, with a programming background at Festival de Brasília do Cinema Brasileiro (2024, 2025), Janela Internacional de Cinema do Recife (2015-2023), Belo Horizonte International Short Film Festival (2017-2019), and forumdoc.bh – Documentary and Ethnographic Film Festival (2018). Moura is currently part of the curation team at FENDA – Experimental Festival of Film Arts. He developed the platform Fuga in 2020, aimed at the collective study and international exchange of dissident imagery and creative practices. Moura has been an advisor and jury member for various institutions and festivals, including Olhar de Cinema/Curitiba IFF (2017), Doclisboa (2022), and the Berlinale Teddy Award (2024).
Luís Fernando Moura
Luís Fernando Moura participated in “Greatest” Short Films of All Time 2025, a first-ever poll of its kind as a collective love letter to the art of short-form moving image. yanco and Kurzfilm Festival Hamburg, in collaboration with Talking Shorts, invited filmmakers, curators, distributors, critics, and scholars worldwide to nominate 10 audiovisual works under sixty minutes that they personally consider the “greatest” of all time. This was Luís Fernando Moura’s submission:
This does not intend to be a comprehensive or conclusive “best short films” list — indeed, how should such a collection look when it comes to this medium of nonstop daring and insatiable takes on glance and on materiality? Therefore, these ten films altogether might rather gather a body of unsettling pieces to claim room in a venturesome, alternative, dissident perception of film reaches; one that builds up as a sentiment of playing with boundaries, be it geographical, historical or artistic. At its greatest, short film as a specific filmmaking form perhaps shall belong somewhere still to be discovered, maybe close to a worldly delirium, just in order to envision worlds of their very own nature, to be collectively experienced for the first time. It may not be by accident that the films hereby recollected came out at times of important transitions, ruptures and drifts, both cultural and technical ones.
— Luís Fernando Moura| Movie | Original Title | Director | Country | Year | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jaime | António Reis | Portugal | 1974 | 35’ | ||
| Un Muelle del Sena | Horacio Coppola | Argentina | 1934 | 3’ | ||
| Jordan's Dance | Derek Jarman | United Kingdom | 1977 | 12’ | ||
This piece of filmmaking also used later for another (and way longer) film, Jubilee (1978), could be placed on a list of films that have discovered the world viewed, just like the Lumière Brothers', even if it was shot 80 years later. This may remind us how the underground artists keep discovering and occasionally find themselves a different enlightenment in dissent. From elsewhere there will always be one more way to stun anyone who sees. |
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| Tatakox Vila Nova | Guigui Maxakali | Brazil | 2009 | 21’ | ||
The rise of indigenous filmmaking in different parts of the world will eventually materialize in exquisite experiences of the world we see and sense, like what we cross paths with here. A way of collective filmmaking within the frame of a cosmovision of then outsiders (here, the Maxakali one) that turns into film and burns whatever references to rely on, and where we therefore discover ourselves living the flow of mysterious phenomena. Is this a play or is this life? What is this camera doing? |
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| On the Other Island En la otra isla | Sara Gómez | Cuba | 1968 | 41’ | ||
The discovery of film as a direct tool — with eyes and ears — has its finest, most luminous moments when it comes from plain honesty, interest and truth. It may simply be a story of one who wants, or even needs, to discover, meet, listen and understand. |
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| Child of Resistance | Haile Gerima | USA | 1973 | 36’ | ||
The encounter between film and the fight for worldwide liberation has its very own rich history. A forceful Haile Gerima summons up a picture, a figure, an icon. It shall be lived as a dream, or perhaps a nightmare, and still it will never lack brightness, luminosity, lucidity. Behind the bars one will find the stage for the mastermind. This comes and goes as something to stay forever, both for the struggling communities and for one's imagination. |
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| Phantoms of Nabua ผีนาบัว | Apichatpong Weerasethakul | Germany, Thailand, United Kingdom | 2009 | 11’ | ||
Darkness, a moving object, subjects, something that burns up. It's like describing the basics of the world, or also the basics of the moving image. Needless to say cinema is not dead and never was, but sometimes we remember that we didn't know (again) what cinema was, until we (once again) knew. There is always a next way to meet transcendence without ever leaving the ground. |
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| Rafael, 1975 | Narcisa Hirsch | Argentina | 1975 | 11’ | ||
Making cinema is also a way to address letters, and there may be thousands and thousands of short films that are meant to be letters somehow. This one is a masterful love letter, a letter from someone who does know what they should do with a letter: it needs cinema, it understands cinema and what cinema can do and should do, it loves cinema, so — seemingly effortless, just like one does as they truly love — it manages to be all about love and, we could say, it is itself a film and also what one would call love. Maybe we have found love (and film) after all. |
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| Noturno em Ré-cife Maior | Jomard Muniz de Britto | Brazil | 1981 | 35’ | ||
The voice says: “The opposite of the bourgeois is not the proletarian, but the bohemian”. Spread all over the world there will have been artists rolling film as envisionments of counterculture, that is, as sharp takes on the picturing of the common time that will always tell a different story, remaining as proof that lively spirits inhabit the timeline and leave strange outputs of a reenchanting gaze. Creatures like vampires are feeding various streams apart from the main one, and their power to reinterpret and reexpress culture also nourishes the history-driven fantasy of outcasts. |
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| Line Describing a Cone | Anthony McCall | USA | 1973 | 30’ | ||